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BRASÍLIA –
Fernando Haddad,
PT presidential candidate defeated
Jair Bolsonaro,
PSL, won with 82.47% of the votes
Provisional Prisoners
of the country eligible to participate in the elections. A total of 7,934 people chose one of the two candidates, which represents 3.4% of the total number of prisoners without a definitive sentence in Brazil, approximately 237,000.
There were 6,543 votes for Haddad (82.47%) against 1,391 (17.53%) for Bolsonaro in the compound, according to a GLOBO survey based on the official results of the second round. In the general elections, the score was quite different: Bolsonaro obtained 55.13% of the preference of the Brazilians, against 44.87% of the votes won by the PT.
Prisoners, because they have no final judgment, when they can no longer appeal, preserve their political rights and can vote. However, it is necessary for the electoral justice to make the electoral sections available in the prisons. In the second round of elections in 2018, 220 sections were created in places of deprivation of liberty.
Despite the expressive victory of Haddad among the provisional prisoners, Bolsonaro won in three states: Amazonas (with 62.2% of the valid votes), Paraná (with 60%) and Acre (with 55.06%) ). Haddad took it to 19 other units of the Federation. In Ceará, he obtained the highest number of votes: 98.2% – 109 votes for the Petista against only two for Bolsonaro.
There were no votes in five states: Rio de Janeiro, Mato Grosso do Sul, Rio Grande do Norte, Mato Grosso and Tocantins. Lack of security was the most common reason at the time of the elections for not making the ballot boxes available to detainees in prisons.
If one badyzed the results of the 220 polls, Bolsonaro lost on 200, equalized on two and won on 18. He had the most expressive victory, more than 95% of the electorate, in two sections installed in the municipality of Abreu e Lima (PE). In 26 other countries, the president-elect did not receive a single vote.
Voters entitled to vote in sections formed in prisons are not all provisional inmates, because polling stations and school officials can also vote on the spot. However, they are in the minority, because the installation of the structures must allow to meet the prisoners with political rights preserved.
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